Polypore

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Polypores (Ganoderma sp.) growing on a tree in Borneo.

Polypores are a group of fungi that form fruiting bodies with pores or tubes on the underside (see Delimitation for exceptions). They are a morphological group of basidiomycetes like gilled mushrooms and hydnoid fungi, and not all polypores are closely related to each other. Polypores are also called bracket fungi, and their woody fruiting bodies are called conks.

Most polypores inhabit tree trunks or branches consuming the wood, but some soil-inhabiting species form mycorrhiza with trees. Polypores and their relatives corticioid fungi are the most important agents of wood decay. Thus they play a very significant role in nutrient and carbon cycle of forest ecosystems.

Over a thousand polypore species have been described to science,[1] but large part of the diversity is still unknown even in relatively well-studied temperate areas. Polypores are much more diverse in old natural forests with abundant dead wood than in younger managed forests or plantations. Consequently a number of species have declined drastically and are under threat of extinction due to logging and deforestation.

Polypores are used in traditional medicine, and they are actively studied for their medicinal value and various industrial applications. Several polypore species are serious pathogens of plantation trees and major causes of timber spoilage.

Description

Schematic drawing of a pileate polypore fruiting body

The fungal individual that develops the fruiting bodies we identify as polypores resides in soil or wood as mycelium. Polypores are often restricted to either deciduous (angiosperm) or conifer (gymnosperm) host trees. Some species depend on a single tree genus (e.g. Piptoporus betulinus on birch, Perenniporia corticola on dipterocarps).

Forms of polypore fruiting bodies range from mushroom-shaped to thin effused patches that develop on dead wood. Perennial fruiting bodies of some species growing on living trees can grow over 50 years old (e.g. Phellinus igniarius). Most species of polypores develop new, short-lived fruiting bodies annually or several times every year. Abundant fruiting takes place during the autumn or rainy season.

Structure of the fruiting bodies is simple. Effused or resupinate fruiting bodies typically consist of two layers - tube layer of vertically arranged tubes that open downwards, and supporting layer called subiculum that supports and attached the tubes to substrate. In fruiting bodies with a cap (pileate fruiting bodies) the tissue between upper surface and the pore layer is called context. A few polypores (e.g. Fomes fomentarius and Inocutis rhaedes) also have a core between context and substrate. Minority of polypore species also have a stalk (stipe) than can attach to the cap either laterally or centrally depending on the species.

Polypore tubes are a honey-comb-like structure, where the individual tubes have fused together. Their sides are covered with spore-forming surface, the hymenium. The tubes offer shelter for developing spores and help to increase spore-producing surface. Pore size and shape vary a lot between species, but little within a species - some Hexagonia spp. have 5 mm wide pores whereas pores of Antrodiella spp. are invisible to naked eye with 15 pores per mm. Generally the larger the pores, the larger the spores. A few polypores produce asexual spores (chlamydospores or conidia) in the upper surface of their cap (e.g. Echinopora aculeifera, Oligoporus ptychogaster) or without the presence of a sexual fruiting body (e.g. Inonotus rickii, Heterobasidion spp.).[2]

Ecology

Polypores are among the most efficient decomposers of lignin and cellulose, the main components of wood. Due to this ability they dominate communities of wood-rotting organisms in land ecosystems along with corticioid fungi. Through decomposing tree trunks they recycle a major part of nutrients in forests.

Only basidiomycetes are known to initiate lignin degradation (i.e. cause white rot). A recent study linked the end of formation of large-scale coal deposits in the end of the Carboniferous period 300 million years ago to the evolution of ligning-degrading basidiomycetes.[3] More efficient degradation of wood by fungi meant less plant material (coal-to-be) accumulating in the soil.

On the other hand most brown-rot fungi are polypores. These species have lost their lignin degradation ability but are very efficient in degrading cellulose. Brown-rot fungi are prevalent on conifer hosts and open, sun-exposed habitats. The fungal community in any single trunk may include both white-rot and brown-rot species, complementing each other's wood degradation strategies.

Polypores and other decomposer fungi are the first step in food chains that feed on decomposed plant material. A rich fauna of insects, mites and other invertebrates feed on polypore mycelium and fruiting bodies, further providing food for birds and other larger animals. Woodpeckers and other hole nesting birds typically carve their nests in softer wood decomposed by polypores.

Threats

Almost all polypores are dependent on trees for their survival. Deforestation and intensive forest management cause declines in polypore abundance and diversity. For many species the changes can be too much, and they start a slow slide towards extinction. Since most polypore species are relatively widespread, this process is typically slow. Regional extinctions can happen relatively quickly and have been documented (for instance Antrodia crassa in North Europe[4]).

Polypores can decline for many reasons. They can be dependent on a single host or a very special habitat. For instance Echinodontium ballouii has been found only in Atlantic white cedar swamps in the Northeastern USA.[5][6] Species can be dependent on very old tree individuals like Bridgeoporus nobilissimus of the Northwestern USA. Both of these species also have a rather restricted range, making them more vulnerable to extinction.

In addition to the host tree individual, the characteristics of the surrounding habitat also matter. Some species prefer closed-canopy forest with a moist, even microclimate that could be disturbed for instance by logging (e.g. Skeletocutis jelicii). Others suffer from lack of open forest-fire habitat in areas where fire suppression is done (e.g. Gloeophyllum carbonarium in Nordic countries where forest fires are part of the natural forest dynamics).

For most declining species the main problem is lack of dead wood in the forest. When suitable tree trunks are too sparse in the landscape, not all species are able to spread to new trunks after old ones have been consumed, causing the population to decline and eventually vanish. Thus species that are abundant in old-growth forests with abundant dead wood can be totally absent from managed forests. For instance Amylocystis lapponica and Fomitopsis rosea are dominant species in North European old-growth spruce forests from Poland to Norway, but absent in managed forests.

Climate change may cause a problem for polypores that are already dependent on a few fragments of old-growth forests and may be unable to migrate with changing vegetation.

Indicator value

Polypores have been used as indicator species of healthy natural forests or old-growth forests in Europe. They are good indicators of invertebrate diversity on dead wood and include many endangered species. Polypores make good indicators because they are relatively easy to find - many species produce conspicuous and long-lasting fruiting bodies - and because they can be identified in the field.

The first indicator list of polypores widely used in forest inventories and conservation work was developed in northern Sweden in 1992 ("Steget före" method).[7][8] "Steget före" list included six polypores in three value classes. In Finland, a list of 30 species for spruce-dominated forests was published in 1996 and widely adopted.[9] Later a similar list for pine-dominated forests was published. Longer lists of indicator species have since been published in Sweden.[10][11]

Many indicator species are red-listed, but not necessarily all. National red lists of fungi typically include many polypores and are used as indicator lists of conservation value in many European countries.

Classification

For most of 20th century polypores were treated as a family, the Polyporaceae. Reconstructions of family tree of fungi show that the poroid fruiting body has evolved numerous times in the past. Modern DNA-based evolutionary classification places polypores to at least 12 orders.[12][13][14] The orders containing most polypore species are the Polyporales (genera such as Fomes, Polyporus and Trametes) and Hymenochaetales (e.g. Oxyporus, Phellinus and Trichaptum). Economically perhaps the most significant polypores Heterobasidion spp., pests of conifer plantations, belong to the Russulales. Other polypore orders are the Agaricales, Amylocorticiales, Auriculariales, Boletales, Cantharellales, Gloeophyllales, Sebacinales, Thelephorales and Trechisporales.

The Polyporales in the modern sense are not only polypores but also other fruiting body types such as crust fungi, hydnoid fungi and agaricoid mushrooms. The term polypore describing a morphological group should not be confused with the taxonomic groups Polyporales or Polyporaceae of the modern literature.

Currently polypores are divided into about 170 genera.[15][16] That number is bound to rise significantly through better understanding of evolutionary relationships between species and through mapping of uncovered diversity in the tropics. All in all classification of polypores is in flux.

Delimitation (morphology)

Most polypores have a poroid hymenium, but not all species. A few, for instance Elmerina holophaea and Lenzites betulinus, form gills like agarics but are still considered polypores, since in all other respects they are similar to closely related polypores, forming tough fruiting bodies on the wood. A couple of species where the tubes have not fused together in a honey-comb manner are variably classified as polypores or not (e.g. Porotheleum fimbriatum). There's no clear distinction between polypores and hydoid fungi - some polypores with irregularly poroid lower surface have been considered both polypores and hydnoid fungi (e.g. Echinodontium tinctorium, Irpex lacteus).

Bolete mushrooms are a separate morphological group not included in polypores even though they have tubes. Fleshy fruiting bodies with a stalk and microscopic characters separate boletes from polypores.

Medicinal uses

Most polypores are edible or at least non-toxic, however one genus of polypores has members that are very poisonous. Polypores from the Hapalopilus genus have caused poisoning in several people with effects including kidney dysfunction and deregulation of central nervous system functions. ] Some polypores have been used in ritual and for utilitarian purposes for ages; the famous Ötzi the Iceman was found carrying two different polypore species, Piptoporus betulinus which was notable for its antibacterial properties,[citation needed] and Fomes fomentarius, which, although also having medicinal properties, was likely used for starting fires.[17]

Two medicinal mushroom polypores in use today are Ganoderma lucidum coll. (reishi or lingzhi) and Trametes versicolor (turkey tail). Beyond their traditional use in herbal medicine, contemporary research has suggested many applications of polypores for the treatment of illnesses related to the immune system and cancer recovery.

Several species have been studied for their ability to produce compounds with anti-pathogenic activity.[18][19][20][21][22]

Gallery

References

  1. Kirk PM et al. (2008) Ainsworth and Bisby's dictionary of the fungi. 10th edition. CABI Europe.
  2. Gilbertson RL, Ryvarden L (1986) North American polypores 1, Abortiporus to Lindtneria. Oslo, Fungiflora.
  3. Floudas D et al. (2012) The Paleozoic origin of enzymatic lignin decomposition reconstructed from 31 fungal genomes. Science 336: 1715-1719.
  4. Junninen K (2009) Conservation of Antrodia crassa. Metsähallituksen luonnonsuojelujulkaisuja, sarja A 182: 1-51.
  5. Gilbertson RL, Ryvarden L (1986) North American polypores 1, Abortiporus to Lindtneria. Oslo, Fungiflora.
  6. http://www.mushroomhunter.net/ballouii.htm
  7. Karström M (1992) Steget före – en presentasjon. Svensk Botanisk Tidskrift 86: 103-114.
  8. http://www.hkust.se/snf-ovik/Steget.htm
  9. Kotiranta H, Niemelä T (1996) Uhanalaiset käävät Suomessa. 2nd ed. Suomen ympäristökeskus, Helsinki.
  10. Nitare J (2000) Signalarter. Indikatorer på skyddsvärd skog. Flora över kryptogamer. Skogsstyrelsen förlag, Jönköping.
  11. http://www.skogsstyrelsen.se/Myndigheten/Skog-och-miljo/Biologisk-mangfald/Signalarter/
  12. Hibbett D et al. (2007) A higher-level phylogenetic classification of the Fungi. Mycological Research 111: 509-547.
  13. Binder M et al. (2010). Amylocorticiales ord. nov. and Jaapiales ord. nov.: Early diverging clades of Agaricomycetidae dominated by corticioid forms. Mycologia 102: 865-880.
  14. Ryvarden L, de Meijer AAR (2002) Studies in neotropical polypores 14. New species from the state of Paraná, Brazil. Synopsis Fungorum 15: 34–69.
  15. Ryvarden L (1990) Genera of polypores. Fungiflora, Oslo.
  16. MycoBank (http://www.mycobank.org)
  17. Peintner, U.; Pöder, R.; Pümpel, T. (1998), "The iceman's fungi", Mycological Research 102 (10): 1153, doi:10.1017/S0953756298006546 
  18. Collins RA, Ng TB (1997), "Polysaccharopeptide from Coriolus versicolor has potential for use against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection", Life Sci 60 (25): PL383–7, doi:10.1016/S0024-3205(97)00294-4, ISSN 0024-3205, PMID 9194694 
  19. Moradali MF, Mostafavi H, Hejaroude GA, Tehrani AS, Abbasi M, Ghods S (2006), "Investigation of potential antibacterial properties of methanol extracts from fungus Ganoderma applanatum", Chemotherapy 52 (5): 241–4, doi:10.1159/000094866, ISSN 0009-3157, PMID 16899973 
  20. Li Y, Yang Y, Fang L, Zhang Z, Jin J, Zhang K (2006), "Anti-hepatitis activities in the broth of Ganoderma lucidum supplemented with a Chinese herbal medicine", Am J Chin Med 34 (2): 341–9, doi:10.1142/S0192415X06003874, ISSN 0192-415X, PMID 16552843 
  21. Wang HX, Ng TB (September 2006), "A laccase from the medicinal mushroom Ganoderma lucidum", Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 72 (3): 508–13, doi:10.1007/s00253-006-0314-9, ISSN 0175-7598, PMID 16636832 
  22. Wang H, Ng TB (January 2006), "Ganodermin, an antifungal protein from fruiting bodies of the medicinal mushroom Ganoderma lucidum", Peptides 27 (1): 27–30, doi:10.1016/j.peptides.2005.06.009, ISSN 0196-9781, PMID 16039755 

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